ICD-11 in Australia: What’s Coming and When
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Classifications Explained
ICD-11 in Australia: What’s Coming and When
ICD-11 is the World Health Organization’s eleventh revision of the International Classification of Diseases, adopted by the World Health Assembly in 2019 and in effect globally since 1 January 2022. Australia has not yet set an adoption date. The Independent Health and Aged Care Pricing Authority (IHACPA), the federal agency responsible for national health classifications, has a business case in progress with a final report due in mid-2026. Until a decision is made, Australian hospitals continue to code against ICD-10-AM.
This guide explains what ICD-11 is, how it differs from ICD-10, where Australia sits in the transition process, and what it all means for someone training as a clinical coder today. It is written for career changers, Diploma of Clinical Coding students, and coding managers who want a clear, current picture of what is coming and when.
What is ICD-11?
ICD-11 is the eleventh revision of the International Classification of Diseases, maintained by the World Health Organization (WHO). It is the global standard for recording, reporting, and analysing health conditions and causes of death.
WHO member states adopted ICD-11 at the World Health Assembly in May 2019. The classification came into force on 1 January 2022 for reporting mortality and morbidity data internationally. Each country then decides on its own implementation path, timeline, and any national modification.
Unlike ICD-10, which has been in use internationally since 1994, ICD-11 was built from the ground up as a digital-first classification. It has a structured reference ontology, a browser and coding tool hosted by WHO, a set of APIs, and machine-readable content designed for integration with electronic health records. The publication itself is maintained continuously online rather than released as printed books on a fixed edition cycle.
For clinical coders, the practical headline is that ICD-11 is still a classification of diseases, still organised into chapters, still has codes that stem from anatomy, aetiology, and clinical presentation. The core task of lookup and verification remains. What changes is the structure, the codes themselves, and the tooling around them.
How ICD-11 differs from ICD-10
ICD-11 is a structural evolution of ICD-10, not a rebranding. The changes are substantive but they build on principles Australian coders already apply every day.
The most visible differences for a working coder are:
What does not change is the craft. A coder still reads clinical documentation, still identifies the main condition and additional diagnoses and procedures, still applies a rulebook, still queries clinicians when documentation is unclear. The lookup-plus-verify approach carries across. The classification is the content being looked up; the skill is the same skill.
ICD-10-AM vs ICD-11 at a glance
| Feature | ICD-10-AM (current in Australia) | ICD-11 (WHO global) |
|---|---|---|
| Publisher | IHACPA, as an Australian modification of ICD-10 | World Health Organization |
| Chapters | 22 chapters | 28 chapters, including new chapters on immune system, sleep-wake, sexual health, traditional medicine, functioning, and extension codes |
| Code structure | Alphanumeric: one letter plus 2 to 5 digits, with occasional sixth-character extensions for laterality, burn site, or external cause | Alphanumeric: digit or letter start, fixed pattern, no “O” or “I” to avoid 0 or 1 confusion |
| Coding approach | Largely pre-coordinated codes; external causes and place-of-occurrence captured through Chapter XX and related standards | Post-coordination: stem code plus one or more extension codes for anatomy, laterality, severity, temporal pattern and more |
| Update cycle | Full edition every 2 to 3 years (currently Thirteenth Edition 2025), with National Coding Advice between editions | Continuous online maintenance with an annual release cycle |
| Publication format | Printed volumes (Alphabetic Index, Tabular List) plus matching digital software | Digital-first: online browser, coding tool, APIs, machine-readable content |
| Paired companion classifications | ACHI for interventions and Australian Coding Standards as the rulebook | No direct procedure classification in ICD-11 itself; countries pair ICD-11 with their existing procedure system |
| Australian status | In use in all public and private hospitals; mandatory for activity-based funding | Under assessment; no adoption date announced |
The comparison highlights a key point. ICD-11 is richer and more granular, but Australia’s classification environment is not just ICD-10. It is ICD-10-AM paired with ACHI and the ACS, and it drives AR-DRG grouping, activity-based funding, and private insurance contracts. Any ICD-11 transition has to solve that whole stack, not just swap one book for another.
Where Australia sits: the current position
As of 2026, Australia has not announced an adoption date for ICD-11. The transition is in a structured assessment phase led by IHACPA with support from the Australian ICD-11 Task Force.
Several strands of work are running in parallel:
The sequencing matters. Australia does not adopt new classifications cold. IHACPA’s normal practice, established across multiple ICD-10-AM editions, is structured consultation, impact assessment, mapping, software coordination, and phased implementation with hospitals and jurisdictions. An ICD-11 transition would follow the same pattern at a larger scale because it also touches AR-DRGs, state and territory data collections, private insurance reporting, and coder training. A firm “go live” date will appear after the business cases are accepted and a national implementation plan is agreed, not before.
The honest summary for anyone training now is this. ICD-11 is coming to Australia at some point. The when is not yet public, and the how is still being designed. Hospitals will code against ICD-10-AM for the foreseeable future, and the current Thirteenth Edition 2025 is what new coders learn and work with today.
How a transition is likely to work
Australia has transitioned classifications before. The pattern is structured, slow, and coordinated across the whole health system. An ICD-11 transition would follow a familiar shape.
A realistic sequence, based on how ICD-10-AM editions are currently implemented and how other countries are approaching ICD-11, looks like this:
- 1Business case and decision. IHACPA and the AITF present business cases to Australian health ministers. A formal decision is made on whether and when to adopt ICD-11, and whether to adopt WHO ICD-11 directly or build an Australian Modification (an “ICD-11-AM”).
- 2National implementation plan. A multi-year plan is agreed between the Commonwealth, states and territories, and private sector stakeholders. It covers classifications, funding, software, data collections, and training.
- 3Mapping and AR-DRG refresh. ICD-10-AM to ICD-11 maps are finalised. AR-DRG definitions and related funding classifications are reviewed and rebuilt so activity-based funding still works the day ICD-11 goes live.
- 4Software and data collection readiness. Hospital coding tools, patient administration systems, and jurisdictional data collections are updated. ICD-11’s digital-first format and APIs make this different from a book-based edition update, but the underlying work is the same: every downstream system that consumes classification data has to be refreshed.
- 5Training and workforce readiness. RTOs, universities, and employers refresh training materials. The Clinical Coder’s Society of Australia (CCSA), jurisdictional health departments, and education providers deliver targeted transition programs. HLT50321 content is updated when the national curriculum changes.
- 6Phased go-live. Implementation across the country is likely to be staged rather than switched on in a single day. Pilot sites, dual-coding periods, and overlapping reporting on ICD-10-AM and ICD-11 are the international norm for moves of this size.
- 7Monitoring and stabilisation. After go-live, coding audits, AR-DRG outputs, and funding flows are monitored closely. Early issues are addressed through supplementary guidance, mirroring the National Coding Advice model used today.
Timelines elsewhere give a rough sense of scale. The United Kingdom, Germany, and Canada are each running multi-year ICD-11 preparation programs. No large hospital system has moved the entire operational coding workflow to ICD-11 yet. Early adopters are using ICD-11 primarily for mortality coding and selected statistical reporting.
What it means for coders in training right now
If you are starting HLT50321 today or thinking about it, the right way to think about ICD-11 is future continuing professional development, not a reason to hesitate.
Three practical points matter:
For coding managers and workforce planners, the sensible stance is the same. Watch the IHACPA and AITF announcements, participate in consultations, contribute to mapping validation where invited, and keep staff current on ICD-10-AM until the transition plan is signed. When a firm date emerges, structured retraining begins.
Learning ICD-10-AM through HLT50321
Australian coders learn ICD-10-AM through the HLT50321 Diploma of Clinical Coding, a 12-month, 100% online qualification that trains you on the current edition using integrated digital coding software.
The course covers ICD-10-AM, ACHI, and the Australian Coding Standards, using real-style Australian hospital episodes. Because the Diploma runs daily intakes year-round and updates its content as each new ICD-10-AM edition is released, students currently train on the Thirteenth Edition 2025, the same edition hospitals are coding against today. If Australia adopts ICD-11 in the years ahead, the course will be updated to match the national implementation plan. For a deeper dive into the current classifications, see our ICD-10-AM explained guide.
If you want a lighter entry point first, BSBMED301 Interpret and apply medical terminology appropriately is our short-course unit that teaches the medical vocabulary you will need. It pairs well with HLT50321 but does not qualify you to code hospital episodes on its own.
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